in the mesosphere
The mesosphere protects the earth from most meteoroids.
The mesosphere is the layer of the atmosphere that protects the Earth's surface from most meteoroids. Meteoroids burn up in this layer due to the high temperature caused by the friction with the air molecules.
The atmospheric layer closest to the Earth's crust is the troposphere. It is where we live and where most weather phenomena occur.
The mesosphere is the layer of the atmosphere that protects Earth's surface from most meteoroids. When meteoroids enter the mesosphere, they burn up due to the high temperature caused by friction with the air particles. This process produces the phenomena known as shooting stars or meteors.
Meteoroids are more likely to strike Mercury because its proximity to the sun results in a denser population of meteoroids in its vicinity. Additionally, Mercury's lack of a substantial atmosphere means there is no protective layer to burn up meteoroids before they reach the surface. Earth's atmosphere, on the other hand, acts as a shield, causing most meteoroids to burn up before they reach the surface.
Usually the troposphere.
The mesosphere protects the earth from most meteoroids.
ozone layer
The troposphere is the closest to the Earth and most dense atmospheric layer
The mesosphere is the layer of the atmosphere that protects the Earth's surface from most meteoroids. Meteoroids burn up in this layer due to the high temperature caused by the friction with the air molecules.
The atmospheric layer containing pollution is troposphere. It the nearest to earth.
Proposphere. This is the first layer about 12 km from the earth.This is 3/4 part of total atmospheric mass.Temparetutre are constant in this layer.
The lower stratosphere.
The troposphere.
The layer of atmosphere that contains the maximum ozone is stratopshere. It contains most of the ozone in the form of ozone layer.
The atmospheric layer closest to the Earth's crust is the troposphere. It is where we live and where most weather phenomena occur.
The mesosphere is the layer of the atmosphere that protects Earth's surface from most meteoroids. When meteoroids enter the mesosphere, they burn up due to the high temperature caused by friction with the air particles. This process produces the phenomena known as shooting stars or meteors.